OPEC

OPEC Just Screwed You

3- It isn’t the only game in town

If one only paid passing attention to the media, you might get the impression that OPEC is the only oil game in town. Granted, its member countries control about two-thirds of the world’s proven oil reserves and over 30% of the globe’s oil production; however, there are other sets of somewhat substantial oil-producing groups.

Originally formed as an agent of the Marshall Plan following World War II, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) is a vast and all-encompassing organization with all sorts of arms and legs. Of its 30 member countries, a minority are oil producers, including the USA, Canada, Mexico, and the UK. Together they account for about 23% of the world’s oil production.

Additionally, the Russian Federation and a handful of former Soviet states, such as Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, are responsible for about 15% of global oil production.

4- It was formed to fight the "Seven Sisters"

The world’s wealthy oil barons have not always resided in the Middle East. In fact, for most of the 20th century, the member nations of OPEC were at the mercy of the so-called “Seven Sisters,” a non-organizational set of oil producers and distributors which, perhaps due to that non-organizational status, somehow eluded antitrust prosecution. The Seven Sisters was composed of Standard Oil of New Jersey, Royal Dutch Shell, Anglo-Persian Oil, Standard Oil of New York, Standard Oil of California, Gulf Oil, and Texaco.

By 1960, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela had grown tired of exporting their oil and then having to buy it back at higher prices. They formed OPEC to assert their "legitimate rights in an international oil market," and by the 1970s, thanks in part to strategic maneuvers such as the Arab oil embargo, began to dominate the market.

5- Its "customers" see bigger oil profits than its members

Oil taxes levied by countries that regularly import oil from OPEC, such as the U.S., the UK, Japan and Italy, are often as much to blame for high oil prices as OPEC. Such taxes allow some countries to see oil-related revenues that are three or four times higher than some OPEC members see from exports. In addition, the production and development of oil requires huge investments, a fact that further chips away at OPEC member profit margins.